Without marketting, version numbers mean nothing. Some high quality stuff is out there that will never hit 1.0...because versions aren't used to represent 'done-ness' for the whole of it, like commercial applications. OTOH, without goals for a version, many a great project stays in development indefinitely. KDE seems to have a mix of the two.Originally posted by: Nothinman
Hell E16 is still alpha if you go by their release numbering and naming =)
Without marketting, version numbers mean nothing. Some high quality stuff is out there that will never hit 1.0...because versions aren't used to represent 'done-ness' for the whole of it, like commercial applications.
BTW, I really like E17. Never could get used to E16, mainly the draggable VWMs tended to be more annoying than useful.
E17 has some, but I dunno if 16 really did. E16, though, was definitely above the competition, and is good even now, in comparison.Originally posted by: Nothinman
But even so, E is nowhere near complete. I'm not even sure if it could ever be complete, it was started as a project to teach the developers about X development, image processing, etc so there were never any official design goals that I know of.Without marketting, version numbers mean nothing. Some high quality stuff is out there that will never hit 1.0...because versions aren't used to represent 'done-ness' for the whole of it, like commercial applications.
I'm faster using the mouse for that sort of thing (I'll menus for web browsing, FI, but use keybaord shortcuts when text editing), except every now than then I'd drag the VWM around or shade it.I never use them either, I just hit ALT+FX to switch desktops.BTW, I really like E17. Never could get used to E16, mainly the draggable VWMs tended to be more annoying than useful.
I love the elive cd's as a demo of what is possible... but as you say I never see a future for it as noone (in terms of bigger distros) seems to take it on to give it a platform and focus for development.
AH, but see, there are plain old Debian, and Ubuntu, packages. Easy to use. Nobody pushes Fluxbox, either, and somehow it remains available for most major distros. IceWM, too...Originally posted by: Seeruk
I love the elive cd's as a demo of what is possible... but as you say I never see a future for it as noone (in terms of bigger distros) seems to take it on to give it a platform and focus for development.
The closest I have come to usable and useful e17 environment is installing it within Ubuntu but it was flakier than Kellogs